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Chicago examiner vol xiii no 39 a m friday Chicago february 5 friday r.Â«rtrtÂ«rwl o 8 patent olfira price one cenr'-^sr .^^^ mullen is acquitted as slayer h b i 3 b^m s ml 1 b m ] nps b t jury was on the square is the only comment of state's prosecutor we find that the defendant was insane at the time he committed the act but that he has since fully re covered we find him not guilty this in substance was the verdict of the jury which tried the rev john j mullen former pastor of the church of the holy rosary for stab bing to death thomas w patterson the postmaster of hillside 111 the verdict was returned shortly after 11 o'clock last night after five hours of deliberation greeted ry parishioners judge dever of the superior court had warned those in the room that no matter what the verdict there must be no display of emotion so when the verdict was read and veri fied his friends and parishioners merely surrounded father mullen shouldering each other in their i'iste to congratulate him but not cheer ing the jurors who freed mullen are franklin p summers foreman 1751 ainslee street otto kamratt 1730 altgeld street samuel h w cox congress park root c davies 340 west sixty-fifth place wendell a loomis 2764 southport avenue arthur blauer 1218 eddy street s t cline 3357 douglas boulevard charles h shrock 5021 cottage grove avenue louis a wheeler 713 east nine tieth place h c machler Chicago heights pratt underwood evanston louis c wagner 4604 magnolia avenue all that assistant state's attorney barnhart would say was the jury was on the square they're honest men marvin e barnhart assistant state's attorney scathingly de nounced mullen in his closing argu ! ment not religious question this is not a religious question mr barnhart told the jury no hint of religious prejudice for or against any person should enter into this case i will not ask this jury to inflict the death penalty you have heard the evidence and i leave it to your own consciences and your own sense of duty as citizens to award the pun ishment that best fits his crime attorneys leroy hackett and bernard barasa for the defense ar gued that mullen was insane â€” tempo rarily at least â€” and not drunk as the state had tried to show judge dever occupied half an hour in his instructions to the jury he j went carefully into the weight which i should be given to the testimony i tending to show mullen was insane : when he did % the killing the jury retired at o o'clock and after an hour's deliberation the fore man asked that supper be served and the court declared a recess until 8 o'clock 400,000,000in war contracts landed for u.s mrs ellis calls all impure to puritans english lecturer gives auditors many of whom are half con cealed the mental shocks they expected Â»_ to the pure all things are pure to the puritan all things are impure that sentence greeted with a sharp burst of applause was virtually the keynote of the address on sex and eugenics delivered last night at i chestra hall by mrs havelock lis of london for the first time Chicago men were invited to one her lectures true to expectation mrs ellis dis 3sed the questions boldly and free there were about 1,500 persons the hall of whom . perhajjs 350 i men :.;. ter entered th utter lack of ostentation nor re they unrewarded they received s mental shock expected by all of salf concealed behind the velvet curtains that draped the boxes and refusing to reveal their identity many prominent men and women were at tentive listeners welcomed by women dr effie e lobdell of the medical woman's club of Chicago under whose auspices the address was piven was chairman she first intro uced miss harriet vittum who in behalf of the clubwomen of this city welcomed mrs ellis mrs ellis first read a message written by her husband to be deliv ered by her in which he made the very positive statement that no oxternal legislation however pretty will suffice to lead men and women to higher ideals mrs ellis prefaced her address by saying laughingly that some of the things told about her and her dis tinguished husband are true we have lived in separate houses i said she and it has been a matter of deep concern to our cornish neigh bors mrs ellis spoke clearly using few gestures and no oratorical tricks whatever must improve knowledge we must improve our knowledge if we would improve our morals i said she there is more senti | mentality and puritanism in the usual j sex book of to-day than sense and philosophy an evolved type is appearing among men and women the sex re lations have been too long and too completely a farce a bargain a vul garity the gluttony of men and jealousy if both men and women at home has d to illegitimate relations cloaked rider the name of romance with un peakably terrible results when love is not concerned with roperty when we face the facts as hildren of the light and advance iroush education and understanding r light and love then we may have le courage to pass eugenic laws capable often necrotic mrs ellis referred to ruskin as ' ex lacking to catherine of russia s over-voluptuous and to oscar ilde as a genius to approach passion and mater ty in the light of cold science is no nail matter said she love and arenthood have taken many chances nd deplorable results have only ometimes been averted by affinity we speak of some as neurotic and bnormal and insane yet we know hat many of the most capable peo le in the world of art music and ama have been of this class tt has included an oscar wilde a ir-hel angelo a chopin a nietszche tchaikowski and a rosa bonheur our duty is not to hurt discour ge or hold back any power that may e of benefit to the eommnnity ig orance puritanism often destroy lust what we would most desire to bring into the world to-day man scarcel / stops to woo and a great deal of it is done by telephone at that aid the woman is often damaged spimtuclly if not physically before she aids her mate jmu^hat we want anÃŸkneed is not sÂ§s^b cil eu sen>cs byÃŸ^islation as cheer up food guns autos rails and am munition among the orders brought from england new york feb 4 the richest lot of contracts ever awarded to american manufacturers at one time arrived here to-night in the strong box of purser palmer of the white star liner adriatic they are said to be worth 400,000,000 and call for food guns auto trucks rails and am munition charles mcknlght presi dent of the carbon steel company of pittsburgh was believed to have ob tained a large portion of the orders but he declined to discuss the matter he said there was a very grave fear among the lower classes in england that great britain and the united states will be at war before the pres ent conflict is over he's happy hiking 2,000 miles for girl every time i think of that girl i speed up a little faster l'm a week ahead of my schedule right now said reginald von bruening who says he is walking from missoula mont to Chicago for the girl he loves and 2,500 he reached ev anston yesterday a business man promised me the money and the girl promised me herself if i'd walk to Chicago by february 11 if i win i'll give the red cross 1,000 but i'll keep the girl 600 dancers on hand but not one musician six hundred dance enthusiasts ar rived at the englewood municipal dance hall 6318 halsted street last night at 8 o'clock they waited until 9:45 for music the loss of an auto mobile wheel delayed the municipal music so mrs leonora z meder took a telephone directory and phoned for an hour in that time she recruited an orchestra and when the municipal music men appeared â€” very late â€” they found their jobs pre-empted saves 2,900 on 45 month goes to war why toil in journalistic fields to garner in the golden sandf you here's a gink that copped the dough by tvorking as a section hand a story that will make john d rockefeller look like a piker as a money getter was put on the tele graph wires last night at blooming ton 111 frank zummo a section hand has earned no more than 45 a month in the past eleven years he quit his job yesterday to return to italy at the call of his country he carried with him a draft for 2,900 it represented his savings out of his wages khayyam in english makes u.s.wonderful cassim husim a subject of the shah of persia was received into cit izenship yesterday why did you come to this coun try judge pope asked because i heard it was free and grand were you disappointed i found it better than i expected t even find khayyam here in eng lish â€” and i like it that way too workers give idle 30,000 in cleveland cleveland 0 feb j â€” it is estimated 30,000 was collected to-day for the unemployed as a rifsult of the share a day's pay campaign inau gurated by the municipal committee on unemployment blanks were dis tributed in factories and office and thousands donated a dav^ga^^rcs for the jobless t ho contln^dmya^^aj mrs palmer is turning more land in to cash louisiana oil property nets her 750,000 new palmer house is rumored society leaders are as interested as are bankers in the oft-repeated query why is mrs potter palmer turning her property into cash sunrise was expressed some time ago when she sold a piece of property that had been in the family for years contrary to all of the tenets of the palmer family the family has al ways purchased promising real estate and held it as it increased in value the stock tickers yesterday told a matter-of-fact story of the sale of the rich oil lands held by the pal mer family in louisiana to the stand ard oil company for 750,000 cash the lands were held for the palmers in the name of the atlas oil com pany i retain oil interest transfer has been made of 51 per cent of the stock to the standard oil company of louisiana and the re maining forty-nine shares are tc be transferred to three trustees in pitts burgh the palmers have retained a royalty interest of one-sixth of the value of all oil taken from a 1,500 acre tract in red river parish the property includes twenty-seven pro ducing wells it has been rumored that a new palmer house is to rise on the site of the old palmer house as a monu ment to the late potter palmer and friends of mrs palmer believe this ex plains the liquidation of some of the palmer properties hotel is discussed another rumor that has been given credit is that the palmer and honore families plan to build an exclusive apartment hotel along sheridan road or the lake shore drive patterning the house after the ritz hotels neither lockwood honore nor pot ter palmer could be reached last night adrian c honore who at tends to most of mrs palmer's busi ness affairs is with her at her home on sarasota bay fla nora bayes sues her latest hubby new york feb 4 â€” supreme court justice cohalan to-day ap pointed william j burke referee in a suit for divorce brought by elea nora k prince against harry prince the divorce papers were sealed and the attorneys refused to discuss the case but it was stated that the parties to the suit are nora bayes the actress and harry clarke the dancer who was her partner in the sun dodgers when she married him in march 1913 billie burke is recovering new york feb 4 miss billie burke who in private life is mrs florence ziegfeld is reported to night to be recovering from the ef fects of an operation she underwent last night at a private sanitarium in new york marshall field's fiancee has grippe new york feb 4 â€” miss evelyn marshall daughter of mrs charles h marshall and fiancee of marshall field 111 is ill in her home 6 east seventy-seventh street it was said at the house to-night that the illness was only an attack of grippe and that miss marshall's physician as sured her speedy recovery there can be no interference with the wed ding plans as no date for the cere mon 1 has b<:en set yates asked of suit smiles that's all hornier governor yates at the ho â– ' salle last evening refused to b-uss the divorce proceedings oi yard r freeman of san fran^uÃŸ e.a tilden dies in Chicago home iii short time banker and packer reported bet ter succumbs suddenly with family at bedside edward tilden president of the na tional packing company died at his home 5020 woodlawn avenue early this morning he had been ill but a few days of quinsy he was fifty nine years old mr tilden long has been one of the leading figures of chicago's pack ing industry born in utica n y he came here early in life and became connected with a wholesale hardware company later he became assistant cashier of the drovers national bank in the union stock yards and later became treasurer of libby mcneill & libby in 1902 he was elected president of that concern he was one of the promoters of the national packing company mr tilden was a director of the Chicago & alton railroad and a number of clubs at his bedside when he died were mrs tilden and his sons ed ward louis and averill also his brother w a tilden and two sis ters mrs b a rice of delevan and mrs j m hollister tries to kidnap girl with boodle bag a near anic took place in the gar rlck theater last night when wil liam h faeder of pittsburgh at tempted to carry off miss marie gray in the beginning of the second act as she was passing from a runway to the stage in her struggles she re ceived a cut from a broken electric light bulb a policeman took faeder to the central station what were you trying to do he was asked i was told that the first person to discover a boodle bag on any of the chorus girls would receive a prize he said as miss gray passed me i saw she was wearing one of the new pocket books and i thought the surest way to make sure of my discovery was to carry her into the lobby faeder was put in a cell and will be prosecuted by miss gray and stan ley sharp manager of the passing show of 1914 company on a disor derly charge this morning the prisoner said he is a member of the m w ray audit company of pittsburgh put america first is president's appeal washington feb 4 think of america first was virtually the ad vice given to-day by president wil son to the rev dr frederick bente of st louis representative of a ger man-american organization urging an embargo on arms and war muni tions the president intimated that the activities of organizations of ameri cans of foreign birth or parentage were a source of embarrassment to the administration the president urged the necessity of observing a policy of non-inter ference with the american govern ment in its diplomatic relations clark renamed for speaker in caucus washington feb 4 the dem ocrats who will compose the house of representatives in the next congress in a noisy caucus to-night chose champ clark as their candidate for speaker and claude kitchin of north carolina for floor leader to succeed oscar underwood who will go to the senate professor fox breaks knee in bobsled fall professor philip d fox of the de partment of astronomy of northwest ern university is in the evanston hospital with a broken kneecap re ceived wednesday night when he was thrown out of a bobsled in north evanston he attempted to transfer to a passing sle'd and miss hie footing and was thrown to the ground the knee is in a cast two million socks ordered in michigan mtv j^k tnej stai j literacy test veto is upheld in house wins by margin of 3 votes party lines dis appear in debate and vote on the immigra tion measure washington feb 4 by the i narrowest of margins following a ! debate in which the floor leader | urged all democrats to override the objection of iha-.bi>eeident the house of representatives late to-day voted to sustain the veto of the immigra tion bill the final count showed that the proponents of the bill who numbered 261 lacked six votes of the two thirds necessary to overcome the veto opponents numbered 136 with representatives kahn of california and oieenerson of minnesota present but paired a change of just three votes in favor of the bill would have overthrown the veto the consideration of the bill con sumed more than five hours to-day during which time were heard a score of speakers under the generalship of representative burnett of alabama chairman of the immigration commit tee and representative gardner of massachusetts against the veto and representatives moore of pennsyl vania and sabath of Illinois support ing the president party lines were disregarded in the debate and the voting ijideitivood's final appeal the reason that i support this legislation said floor leader under i wood just before the vote was taken i is the same as that which the presi dent says caused him to veto the bill i he says the objection to the literacy ' test is that it is restrictive and not selective there is no man in this house who is not in favor of selective restriction but that is not the pur pose of the bill its avowed purpose | is restricting foreign immigrants . not because we have not benefited in j the past from immigration but be | cause conditions have changed moure arraigns federation replying to underwood j hamp j ton moore of pennsylvania declared the verdict of the american people j had never been had on this question j the american federation of labor ! has sent out many letters during the i last few weeks i respect the fed ' eration â€” yet 1 use my own judgment on this bill declared moore who is mr gompers where was j he born he was born in england who is the secretary of labor of ' the united states and where was he i born he is mr wilson and was ! dorn in scotland who is the secretary of the amer ! ican federation of labor and where ! was he born he is frank morrison j and is a canadian and these three distinguished men sent out these letters trixie friganza set free from husband trixl ia the actress yes terday gt-t legal release from the husband i s'he soys she has had to support since he married him in march 191 judge foell signed the decree Â« . ity was the charge he hoki 1 me sometimes till i didn't know whether i was standing or^itting she said hearing held hist octo tthe defendant is charles a mrs boyce in new romance to wed in west mrs virginia lee boyce former wife of chica go publisher who is engaged to be married to a california banker and clubman woman Chicago publisher de serted on wedding trip en gaged to californian santa barbara cal feb 4 mrs virginia lee boyce whose beau tiful home has been the scene of many very exclusive society func tions is to be married in april to richard roberts assistant cashier of the first national bank leading financier and clubman a trip to honolulu will follow the wedding don't say this is my first real love affair that would be untrue said mrs boyce to-night if i were a young girl that might sound roman tic but t have been married before i have lived a very quiet life since coming to santa barbara and really the public cannot be interested in my private affairs i became acquainted with mr roberts almost three years ago our marriage will be a very quiet affair at my home and the only ones present will be our immediate friends and members of our families my mother mrs john adam lee has al ready arrived from Chicago and my sisters are coming soon to attend the wedding was pi'm.isher's wife mrs virginia lee boyce daughter of mr and mrs john adams lee of oak park gained freedom from the disturbing aura of her former hus band w d boyce the Chicago pub lisher in 1912 the former miss lee remained within the boyce zone of influence just three months her entry into it was signalized by ben boyce the publisher's son who when he heard of his father's engagement to miss lee met him one evening in the lobby of the blackstone hotel and ex pressed his disapproval of the match by punching his parent in the nose the romance ended when the elder boyce deserted his wife while the two were on their wedding trip in europe a divorce was granted her in february 1912 eighteen months after the wedding mcbly moftet7 albion professor ends life neutrals warned ships may he sunk all english waters will be war zone after february 18 avers statement declaring the impending move london feb 4 â€” a large amer ican steamer whose identity has not been learned was stranaed last night outside the harbor of esbjero | denmark according to a copenha gen dispatch to the central news salvage steamers are now assisting the stranded vessel thjre is no news here of the steamer oriole which left a few days ago for havre and it is feared she has been tor pedoed it is believed all on board perished berlin via wireless to sajr ville feb 4 â€” a complete blockade of the british isles effective february is was declared by germany to-day and neutral ships were warned to i avoid british waters the following statement was issued by the admiralty first the waters around great britain and ireland including the j whole of the english channel are i declared a war zone from and after february 18 1915 every enemy merchant ship found in this'war j zone will be destroyed even if it is impossible to avert the dangers threatening the crew and passen l s ers - second neutral ships in the war zone are also in danger as in con sequence of the misuse of neutral flags ordered by the british govern ment on january 31 and in view of the hazards of naval warfare it cannot always be avoided that at tacks meant for enemy ships should endanger neutral ships third shipping to the nortward around the shetland islands in the eastern basin of the north sea and in a strip of at least 30 nautica miles broad along the dutch coas is endangered in the same way the order issued by the britial admiralty directing english mei chant ships to fly neutral flags prt voked comment in all the berli newspapers to-day the kreu zeitung takes the order as an at mission that great britain is n longer able to protect its flag on tb sea violates l.aw of nations it is a gloss violation of interna tional law ' says the paper the consequence can only be thai a neutral flag cannot longer protect neutral shipping because no german naval officer can tell w nether it is borne rightfully therefore herman submarines will have to direct tor pedoes also at neutral ships if the neutral powers do not see to it tha the misuse of their flags as lit-..'cta hy the british admiralty docs^fl ta !< " place the vossische zeitung sav^^b.j is a confession of weaknejgjÃŸ^its no sane person would earlier have t!iought^^rs.;p^^^sv miralty capable 3k"'c : other papers ccj^k-jfltg|i <. ebb 'â– '"'.^ vein the nlÂ«.Â£t^^^h s3 ter albion mich feb 4 after sev er^vejj^jfnmjjauh fred a dem hat â€” |^ igap m i and '" "-_ ~ . ..;.._; ." highest 40 lowest 29 average 34 $$$$$$ $ s s $ j $ a trip to i the , california expositions and $ 1,000.00 i in gold ; free * m you ;

Chicago examiner vol xiii no 39 a m friday Chicago february 5 friday r.Â«rtrtÂ«rwl o 8 patent olfira price one cenr'-^sr .^^^ mullen is acquitted as slayer h b i 3 b^m s ml 1 b m ] nps b t jury was on the square is the only comment of state's prosecutor we find that the defendant was insane at the time he committed the act but that he has since fully re covered we find him not guilty this in substance was the verdict of the jury which tried the rev john j mullen former pastor of the church of the holy rosary for stab bing to death thomas w patterson the postmaster of hillside 111 the verdict was returned shortly after 11 o'clock last night after five hours of deliberation greeted ry parishioners judge dever of the superior court had warned those in the room that no matter what the verdict there must be no display of emotion so when the verdict was read and veri fied his friends and parishioners merely surrounded father mullen shouldering each other in their i'iste to congratulate him but not cheer ing the jurors who freed mullen are franklin p summers foreman 1751 ainslee street otto kamratt 1730 altgeld street samuel h w cox congress park root c davies 340 west sixty-fifth place wendell a loomis 2764 southport avenue arthur blauer 1218 eddy street s t cline 3357 douglas boulevard charles h shrock 5021 cottage grove avenue louis a wheeler 713 east nine tieth place h c machler Chicago heights pratt underwood evanston louis c wagner 4604 magnolia avenue all that assistant state's attorney barnhart would say was the jury was on the square they're honest men marvin e barnhart assistant state's attorney scathingly de nounced mullen in his closing argu ! ment not religious question this is not a religious question mr barnhart told the jury no hint of religious prejudice for or against any person should enter into this case i will not ask this jury to inflict the death penalty you have heard the evidence and i leave it to your own consciences and your own sense of duty as citizens to award the pun ishment that best fits his crime attorneys leroy hackett and bernard barasa for the defense ar gued that mullen was insane â€” tempo rarily at least â€” and not drunk as the state had tried to show judge dever occupied half an hour in his instructions to the jury he j went carefully into the weight which i should be given to the testimony i tending to show mullen was insane : when he did % the killing the jury retired at o o'clock and after an hour's deliberation the fore man asked that supper be served and the court declared a recess until 8 o'clock 400,000,000in war contracts landed for u.s mrs ellis calls all impure to puritans english lecturer gives auditors many of whom are half con cealed the mental shocks they expected Â»_ to the pure all things are pure to the puritan all things are impure that sentence greeted with a sharp burst of applause was virtually the keynote of the address on sex and eugenics delivered last night at i chestra hall by mrs havelock lis of london for the first time Chicago men were invited to one her lectures true to expectation mrs ellis dis 3sed the questions boldly and free there were about 1,500 persons the hall of whom . perhajjs 350 i men :.;. ter entered th utter lack of ostentation nor re they unrewarded they received s mental shock expected by all of salf concealed behind the velvet curtains that draped the boxes and refusing to reveal their identity many prominent men and women were at tentive listeners welcomed by women dr effie e lobdell of the medical woman's club of Chicago under whose auspices the address was piven was chairman she first intro uced miss harriet vittum who in behalf of the clubwomen of this city welcomed mrs ellis mrs ellis first read a message written by her husband to be deliv ered by her in which he made the very positive statement that no oxternal legislation however pretty will suffice to lead men and women to higher ideals mrs ellis prefaced her address by saying laughingly that some of the things told about her and her dis tinguished husband are true we have lived in separate houses i said she and it has been a matter of deep concern to our cornish neigh bors mrs ellis spoke clearly using few gestures and no oratorical tricks whatever must improve knowledge we must improve our knowledge if we would improve our morals i said she there is more senti | mentality and puritanism in the usual j sex book of to-day than sense and philosophy an evolved type is appearing among men and women the sex re lations have been too long and too completely a farce a bargain a vul garity the gluttony of men and jealousy if both men and women at home has d to illegitimate relations cloaked rider the name of romance with un peakably terrible results when love is not concerned with roperty when we face the facts as hildren of the light and advance iroush education and understanding r light and love then we may have le courage to pass eugenic laws capable often necrotic mrs ellis referred to ruskin as ' ex lacking to catherine of russia s over-voluptuous and to oscar ilde as a genius to approach passion and mater ty in the light of cold science is no nail matter said she love and arenthood have taken many chances nd deplorable results have only ometimes been averted by affinity we speak of some as neurotic and bnormal and insane yet we know hat many of the most capable peo le in the world of art music and ama have been of this class tt has included an oscar wilde a ir-hel angelo a chopin a nietszche tchaikowski and a rosa bonheur our duty is not to hurt discour ge or hold back any power that may e of benefit to the eommnnity ig orance puritanism often destroy lust what we would most desire to bring into the world to-day man scarcel / stops to woo and a great deal of it is done by telephone at that aid the woman is often damaged spimtuclly if not physically before she aids her mate jmu^hat we want anÃŸkneed is not sÂ§s^b cil eu sen>cs byÃŸ^islation as cheer up food guns autos rails and am munition among the orders brought from england new york feb 4 the richest lot of contracts ever awarded to american manufacturers at one time arrived here to-night in the strong box of purser palmer of the white star liner adriatic they are said to be worth 400,000,000 and call for food guns auto trucks rails and am munition charles mcknlght presi dent of the carbon steel company of pittsburgh was believed to have ob tained a large portion of the orders but he declined to discuss the matter he said there was a very grave fear among the lower classes in england that great britain and the united states will be at war before the pres ent conflict is over he's happy hiking 2,000 miles for girl every time i think of that girl i speed up a little faster l'm a week ahead of my schedule right now said reginald von bruening who says he is walking from missoula mont to Chicago for the girl he loves and 2,500 he reached ev anston yesterday a business man promised me the money and the girl promised me herself if i'd walk to Chicago by february 11 if i win i'll give the red cross 1,000 but i'll keep the girl 600 dancers on hand but not one musician six hundred dance enthusiasts ar rived at the englewood municipal dance hall 6318 halsted street last night at 8 o'clock they waited until 9:45 for music the loss of an auto mobile wheel delayed the municipal music so mrs leonora z meder took a telephone directory and phoned for an hour in that time she recruited an orchestra and when the municipal music men appeared â€” very late â€” they found their jobs pre-empted saves 2,900 on 45 month goes to war why toil in journalistic fields to garner in the golden sandf you here's a gink that copped the dough by tvorking as a section hand a story that will make john d rockefeller look like a piker as a money getter was put on the tele graph wires last night at blooming ton 111 frank zummo a section hand has earned no more than 45 a month in the past eleven years he quit his job yesterday to return to italy at the call of his country he carried with him a draft for 2,900 it represented his savings out of his wages khayyam in english makes u.s.wonderful cassim husim a subject of the shah of persia was received into cit izenship yesterday why did you come to this coun try judge pope asked because i heard it was free and grand were you disappointed i found it better than i expected t even find khayyam here in eng lish â€” and i like it that way too workers give idle 30,000 in cleveland cleveland 0 feb j â€” it is estimated 30,000 was collected to-day for the unemployed as a rifsult of the share a day's pay campaign inau gurated by the municipal committee on unemployment blanks were dis tributed in factories and office and thousands donated a dav^ga^^rcs for the jobless t ho contln^dmya^^aj mrs palmer is turning more land in to cash louisiana oil property nets her 750,000 new palmer house is rumored society leaders are as interested as are bankers in the oft-repeated query why is mrs potter palmer turning her property into cash sunrise was expressed some time ago when she sold a piece of property that had been in the family for years contrary to all of the tenets of the palmer family the family has al ways purchased promising real estate and held it as it increased in value the stock tickers yesterday told a matter-of-fact story of the sale of the rich oil lands held by the pal mer family in louisiana to the stand ard oil company for 750,000 cash the lands were held for the palmers in the name of the atlas oil com pany i retain oil interest transfer has been made of 51 per cent of the stock to the standard oil company of louisiana and the re maining forty-nine shares are tc be transferred to three trustees in pitts burgh the palmers have retained a royalty interest of one-sixth of the value of all oil taken from a 1,500 acre tract in red river parish the property includes twenty-seven pro ducing wells it has been rumored that a new palmer house is to rise on the site of the old palmer house as a monu ment to the late potter palmer and friends of mrs palmer believe this ex plains the liquidation of some of the palmer properties hotel is discussed another rumor that has been given credit is that the palmer and honore families plan to build an exclusive apartment hotel along sheridan road or the lake shore drive patterning the house after the ritz hotels neither lockwood honore nor pot ter palmer could be reached last night adrian c honore who at tends to most of mrs palmer's busi ness affairs is with her at her home on sarasota bay fla nora bayes sues her latest hubby new york feb 4 â€” supreme court justice cohalan to-day ap pointed william j burke referee in a suit for divorce brought by elea nora k prince against harry prince the divorce papers were sealed and the attorneys refused to discuss the case but it was stated that the parties to the suit are nora bayes the actress and harry clarke the dancer who was her partner in the sun dodgers when she married him in march 1913 billie burke is recovering new york feb 4 miss billie burke who in private life is mrs florence ziegfeld is reported to night to be recovering from the ef fects of an operation she underwent last night at a private sanitarium in new york marshall field's fiancee has grippe new york feb 4 â€” miss evelyn marshall daughter of mrs charles h marshall and fiancee of marshall field 111 is ill in her home 6 east seventy-seventh street it was said at the house to-night that the illness was only an attack of grippe and that miss marshall's physician as sured her speedy recovery there can be no interference with the wed ding plans as no date for the cere mon 1 has beeident the house of representatives late to-day voted to sustain the veto of the immigra tion bill the final count showed that the proponents of the bill who numbered 261 lacked six votes of the two thirds necessary to overcome the veto opponents numbered 136 with representatives kahn of california and oieenerson of minnesota present but paired a change of just three votes in favor of the bill would have overthrown the veto the consideration of the bill con sumed more than five hours to-day during which time were heard a score of speakers under the generalship of representative burnett of alabama chairman of the immigration commit tee and representative gardner of massachusetts against the veto and representatives moore of pennsyl vania and sabath of Illinois support ing the president party lines were disregarded in the debate and the voting ijideitivood's final appeal the reason that i support this legislation said floor leader under i wood just before the vote was taken i is the same as that which the presi dent says caused him to veto the bill i he says the objection to the literacy ' test is that it is restrictive and not selective there is no man in this house who is not in favor of selective restriction but that is not the pur pose of the bill its avowed purpose | is restricting foreign immigrants . not because we have not benefited in j the past from immigration but be | cause conditions have changed moure arraigns federation replying to underwood j hamp j ton moore of pennsylvania declared the verdict of the american people j had never been had on this question j the american federation of labor ! has sent out many letters during the i last few weeks i respect the fed ' eration â€” yet 1 use my own judgment on this bill declared moore who is mr gompers where was j he born he was born in england who is the secretary of labor of ' the united states and where was he i born he is mr wilson and was ! dorn in scotland who is the secretary of the amer ! ican federation of labor and where ! was he born he is frank morrison j and is a canadian and these three distinguished men sent out these letters trixie friganza set free from husband trixl ia the actress yes terday gt-t legal release from the husband i s'he soys she has had to support since he married him in march 191 judge foell signed the decree Â« . ity was the charge he hoki 1 me sometimes till i didn't know whether i was standing or^itting she said hearing held hist octo tthe defendant is charles a mrs boyce in new romance to wed in west mrs virginia lee boyce former wife of chica go publisher who is engaged to be married to a california banker and clubman woman Chicago publisher de serted on wedding trip en gaged to californian santa barbara cal feb 4 mrs virginia lee boyce whose beau tiful home has been the scene of many very exclusive society func tions is to be married in april to richard roberts assistant cashier of the first national bank leading financier and clubman a trip to honolulu will follow the wedding don't say this is my first real love affair that would be untrue said mrs boyce to-night if i were a young girl that might sound roman tic but t have been married before i have lived a very quiet life since coming to santa barbara and really the public cannot be interested in my private affairs i became acquainted with mr roberts almost three years ago our marriage will be a very quiet affair at my home and the only ones present will be our immediate friends and members of our families my mother mrs john adam lee has al ready arrived from Chicago and my sisters are coming soon to attend the wedding was pi'm.isher's wife mrs virginia lee boyce daughter of mr and mrs john adams lee of oak park gained freedom from the disturbing aura of her former hus band w d boyce the Chicago pub lisher in 1912 the former miss lee remained within the boyce zone of influence just three months her entry into it was signalized by ben boyce the publisher's son who when he heard of his father's engagement to miss lee met him one evening in the lobby of the blackstone hotel and ex pressed his disapproval of the match by punching his parent in the nose the romance ended when the elder boyce deserted his wife while the two were on their wedding trip in europe a divorce was granted her in february 1912 eighteen months after the wedding mcbly moftet7 albion professor ends life neutrals warned ships may he sunk all english waters will be war zone after february 18 avers statement declaring the impending move london feb 4 â€” a large amer ican steamer whose identity has not been learned was stranaed last night outside the harbor of esbjero | denmark according to a copenha gen dispatch to the central news salvage steamers are now assisting the stranded vessel thjre is no news here of the steamer oriole which left a few days ago for havre and it is feared she has been tor pedoed it is believed all on board perished berlin via wireless to sajr ville feb 4 â€” a complete blockade of the british isles effective february is was declared by germany to-day and neutral ships were warned to i avoid british waters the following statement was issued by the admiralty first the waters around great britain and ireland including the j whole of the english channel are i declared a war zone from and after february 18 1915 every enemy merchant ship found in this'war j zone will be destroyed even if it is impossible to avert the dangers threatening the crew and passen l s ers - second neutral ships in the war zone are also in danger as in con sequence of the misuse of neutral flags ordered by the british govern ment on january 31 and in view of the hazards of naval warfare it cannot always be avoided that at tacks meant for enemy ships should endanger neutral ships third shipping to the nortward around the shetland islands in the eastern basin of the north sea and in a strip of at least 30 nautica miles broad along the dutch coas is endangered in the same way the order issued by the britial admiralty directing english mei chant ships to fly neutral flags prt voked comment in all the berli newspapers to-day the kreu zeitung takes the order as an at mission that great britain is n longer able to protect its flag on tb sea violates l.aw of nations it is a gloss violation of interna tional law ' says the paper the consequence can only be thai a neutral flag cannot longer protect neutral shipping because no german naval officer can tell w nether it is borne rightfully therefore herman submarines will have to direct tor pedoes also at neutral ships if the neutral powers do not see to it tha the misuse of their flags as lit-..'cta hy the british admiralty docs^fl ta !< " place the vossische zeitung sav^^b.j is a confession of weaknejgjÃŸ^its no sane person would earlier have t!iought^^rs.;p^^^sv miralty capable 3k"'c : other papers ccj^k-jfltg|i